Granger leads Pacers over Raptors 105-101

INDIANAPOLIS(AP) -- Danny Granger provided the spark the Indiana
Pacers had been missing.

The forward scored 23 points, and the Pacers overcame a 23-point
deficit to beat the Toronto Raptors 105-101 on Monday night.

It was Indiana's first win in three games since Granger returned
from a heel injury that kept him out for a month.

"We battled back, battled back, battled back," Granger said with
his feet in ice. "Those are the type of wins that can really
start win streaks."

Granger showed his All-Star form in the middle two quarters,
when he scored 19 points to help chip away at Toronto's lead.

"He allows them the ability to stretch the floor, drive to the
basket, just gives them another dimension in scoring," Raptors
coach Jay Triano said. "He can make 3s, but he's not stuck in
that 3-point line."

Troy Murphy had 20 points and 16 rebounds, A.J. Price scored 16
points and Mike Dunleavy added 15 for the Pacers, who had lost
two straight.

Chris Bosh had 27 points and 10 rebounds, and Andrea Bargnani
added 12 points and 17 rebounds for the Raptors, who played
their third game in four days.

"We were fatigued, maybe," Triano said. "Didn't have our legs.
I've never seen us miss that many free throws. But our guys
played as hard as they could in a back-to-back, the way that
they battled, and we didn't have it."

Former Pacers guard Jarrett Jack started for Toronto and
finished with five points and five assists. It was his first
game in Indiana since the Pacers chose not to match Toronto's
offer last summer.

Toronto led 65-52 at halftime, but Indiana opened the second
half with some hot shooting. A 9-3 run cut Toronto's lead to
72-68 midway through the third quarter, but the Raptors still
led by six at the end of the period.

Price hit a 3-pointer, then an acrobatic layup to cut Toronto's
lead to 86-85 with 10 minutes to play, and the Pacers tied the
score on a bank shot by Dunleavy with 7:40 left. Indiana finally
took its first lead on a 3-pointer by Earl Watson that made it
95-92 with just over 5 minutes remaining. Another 3-pointer by
Price made it 100-96 with 1:13 to play.

Toronto cut Indiana's lead to 102-100 on a layup by Bargnani
with 16.8 seconds left.

The Pacers nearly lost the ball on the inbounds play, but
Granger threw the ball off Sonny Weems' leg with 12.8 seconds
left. Murphy was fouled with 11.3 seconds left, and he made the
first, but missed the second free throw to give Toronto a
chance.

Granger fouled Bosh with 5.3 seconds left. Bosh made the first
free throw, but missed the second. Dunleavy rebounded and made
both free throws at the other end with 4.1 seconds left to seal
the win.

Toronto shot 3 of 18 and committed five turnovers in the fourth
quarter.

"We stopped them a bunch of times, was boxing out, limiting them
to one shot," Granger said. "That won the game for us."

Indiana trailed 59-36 in the second quarter, but the Pacers went
on a 16-5 run late in the half. A jumper by Luther Head with 1.7
seconds left cut Toronto's lead to 62-52, but Antoine Wright hit
a 65-footer at the buzzer to push the Raptors' lead to 13.

"I think we went away from what we were doing best," Bosh said.
"We were moving the ball a lot more. They were looking for me in
the post. If they didn't have me in the post, they got it to the
weak side very fast. It's hard to play defense when the ball is
moving so fast."

Indiana hopes to build momentum against Phoenix on Wednesday.

"That's the problem we've been having this year, just being
consistent," Granger said. "We'll have a good showing and then a
bad showing. We just need to get our confidence to the point
where we really know we can win any game."

NOTES: Indiana F Tyler Hansbrough returned after missing seven
games with an inner ear infection. He finished with four points
and seven rebounds. ... Double technicals were issued to Granger
and Weems with 8:09 left in the second quarter after an
altercation. Double technicals were issued to Hansbrough and
Toronto G Jose Calderon in the closing seconds of the third
quarter. ... Pacers F Dahntay Jones did not play for the first
time this season. It was a coach's decision.